My point was the opposite. They gave up on their supposedly planned "big" upgrade packages.
But either way, a floor upgrade is almost never a small upgrade. It's the most important aerodynamic item of these cars.
My point was the opposite. They gave up on their supposedly planned "big" upgrade packages.
Words after Miami suggest rather straightforwardly that at least one more "big" step like Miami was planned for the future, however it turned out that the Miami step was already much bigger than they anticipated :McLaren team principal Andrea Stella: "We will bring some upgrades for the upcoming races. But it will not be a single big upgrade like we have seen in the past twelve months. It will be more about a few individual components.
Remains to be seen how the pecking order will look like by the end of the season, but the stance regarding development has changed after Miami. They had planned on attacking the weaknesses of the car after that but the Miami package eliminated the weaknesses unexpectedly.“But I think, looking at the numbers, looking at how much we actually improved the car, I would have said that we needed two steps of this size to be competitive regularly with Red Bull.
“We have delivered only one [so far]. We look forward to the next one, and this would make me much more optimistic that we can take the serious challenge to Red Bull.”
Big surprise to see it back in action so soon. I expected photos of hospo staff sitting in plastic chairs in the carpark for Silverstone. Maybe they had a spare?
They do not have a spare. The motorhome has been brought back to the German company (Schuler) that manufactured it, to have an extensive cleaning. Obviously, that has been completed quite quickly.Mostlyeels wrote: ↑04 Jul 2024, 23:53Big surprise to see it back in action so soon. I expected photos of hospo staff sitting in plastic chairs in the carpark for Silverstone. Maybe they had a spare?
Yeah he says individual, not small, a deliberate choice of words. I'm just clarifying that he hasn't said that the upgrades will be small or that the curve is slowing down yet though he expects it to.Emag wrote: ↑04 Jul 2024, 22:46Words after Miami suggest rather straightforwardly that at least one more "big" step like Miami was planned for the future, however it turned out that the Miami step was already much bigger than they anticipated :McLaren team principal Andrea Stella: "We will bring some upgrades for the upcoming races. But it will not be a single big upgrade like we have seen in the past twelve months. It will be more about a few individual components.
Remains to be seen how the pecking order will look like by the end of the season, but the stance regarding development has changed after Miami. They had planned on attacking the weaknesses of the car after that but the Miami package eliminated the weaknesses unexpectedly.“But I think, looking at the numbers, looking at how much we actually improved the car, I would have said that we needed two steps of this size to be competitive regularly with Red Bull.
“We have delivered only one [so far]. We look forward to the next one, and this would make me much more optimistic that we can take the serious challenge to Red Bull.”
And of course, this is not a bad thing in itself but you need to understand why things turned out the way they did so that the next time you bring something, it doesn't surprise you in the other direction.
We may be coming to a convengeance ceiling, but what is the evidence that stacks in the face of the same previous trend of upgrade gains being maintained?BMMR61 wrote: ↑05 Jul 2024, 10:21It's looking suspiciously like McLaren are now coming up against the "convergence ceiling". Hopefully the competitive pace achieved over this part of the season in 2023 will provide better data for setups at the circuits we are now going to. Big questions ahead now, like, did the MCL38 platform trade off much of the car's high speed competitiveness as seen by a mediocre Suzuka this year? This would be bad news for this weekend, where I'm hoping we can get both drivers on the podium. By the looks of the rear wing they brought this weekend they are targeting the high speed range - which is more than understandable. I feel reasonably confident that Silverstone will not play to Merc's and Ferrari's strengths, so.....